A Coat of Many Colours: EssaysRoutledge & Paul, 1956 - 352 páginas |
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Página 80
... elements of graphic art are not so limited , but there is an academic kind of abstract art which deliberately restricts itself to fixed elements , and by playing variations on these , would seem to exclude both personal sensibility and ...
... elements of graphic art are not so limited , but there is an academic kind of abstract art which deliberately restricts itself to fixed elements , and by playing variations on these , would seem to exclude both personal sensibility and ...
Página 299
... elements . Let us call them the universal and the incidental . In the universal group are all those elements of form , colour , material , and their interrelations , which appeal directly to the senses , or sensibility . It is because ...
... elements . Let us call them the universal and the incidental . In the universal group are all those elements of form , colour , material , and their interrelations , which appeal directly to the senses , or sensibility . It is because ...
Página 300
... elements which appeal to the emotions and intellect - all those elements associated with words , symbols and ideas . We should include under this head the primitive magical significance of a savage mask , the higher religious ...
... elements which appeal to the emotions and intellect - all those elements associated with words , symbols and ideas . We should include under this head the primitive magical significance of a savage mask , the higher religious ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract abstract art accept activity actually æsthetic anarchism anarchist artist attitude beauty become Ben Nicholson Cézanne Christian Christopher Marlowe colour conception contemporary criticism Cubism D. H. Lawrence distinction doctrine doubt elements emotional English essential example existence expression fact feeling film function harmony Havelock Ellis Hegel Henri Rousseau Henry James human ideal ideas idiom imagination implies individual intellectual intuition James Kierkegaard kind literary literature lived Marlowe Marxism means merely Milton mind modern moral movement nature never objects painter painting perhaps philosophy Picasso picture plastic poem poet poetic poetry political possible principle problem prose Ralph Fox rational razor-shells realism reality realize reason rhythm romantic romanticism Rousseau Ruskin scientific sense sensibility Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's Sickert significance social society spirit style superrealism symbol theory things thought tion true truth values vanished visions verse vulgarity whole words Wordsworth writing wrote